The alt. country singer discusses superb new EP Til the Goin' Get Gone & info on North American tour dates

The first new material from Canadian alt. country stalwart Lindi Ortega since 2015s excellent Faded Gloryville (review) new EP Til The Goin' Gets Gone (review) is a beautifully downbeat collection steeped in minimalist instrumentation and the singer’s strongest lyrics to date.

A resident of country music capital Nashville for several years, a recent move back to her native Canada and overcoming a bout of writer’s block the new EP sees the singer’s career decisively open a chapter. While her relocation to Calgary is too recent to have played an influence yet, ‘I just moved back in February so it's a little too early to tell what kind of musical impact it might have. Unless I start writing songs about the snow and being cold!’ the singer states, the new disc is hopefully a prelude to a new album soon.

While the disc features longstanding sideman ‘Champagne’ James Robertson on guitar, the instrumentation is the most low-key Ortega has issued to date. Was this is a conscious decision or something that became apparent once the recording sessions were completed? ‘It was absolutely a deliberate move’ Lindi responds. ‘I knew before recording that I wanted to keep the production sparse’.

Co-produced with friends Jay Tooke and Jason ‘Rowdy’ Cope at their studio in Nashville, the EP represents the singer’s first production credit. Having fulfilled the contract with Last Gang Records, the set is released through the singer’s own label, the revived Shadowbox Music Inc. Does it feel liberating to be free of record company pressures? ‘It’s very liberating to do your art the way you want to with no outside forces weighing in’ Lindi states. ‘I believe that if your goal is to be a huge mega mainstream success, then sure, follow all the formulas and do all the tweaks that make things good for radio, otherwise, you have every right to be you and have a vision for how you want to sound and see that vision fully realized. It doesn't get more authentic than that’.

The lead track of Til the Goin’ Gets Gone (video) appears to share kinship lyrically with the title tracks of previous releases Tin Star and Faded Gloryville which detailed the pitfalls of the music industry and the grind of touring. Does the new song have a link to the earlier tracks? ‘Yeah, I suppose it does’ Lindi responds. 'I was trying to juxtapose my road of life with the actual road of life. So my particular experiences do fall within the lyrics. But it can all be related to in a metaphorical sense; I did that purposely because I wanted it to encompass a bigger picture, one that we are all a part of. At the end of the day I wanted the song to speak of our human resilience and that's what we count on to get through life’.

Planned as the singer’s swansong before retiring from music ‘No more singing/No more dancing/No more late night pony prancing/In these boots’ the sombre but exquisite Final Bow is the most off-kilter track of the set, a haunting piano led piece that evokes a country lament crossed with Weimar-era cabaret. What was the musical inspiration behind the song? ‘Many moons ago I released an album of cabaret type songs' Lindi answers. 'I seem to lean that way when I write piano songs. I'm not sure why. I always feel like my piano tunes have to have some kind of spooky drama’.

‘I've always tinkered around on the piano’ Lindi says of working on keyboards. ‘I feel like I am not really a piano player, my style of playing is really rudimentary and plinky. Any real piano player would think I was awful. That being said, I feel when I write songs with imperfect piano accompaniment it lends something to the song... It’s some statement on imperfection. I also tend to gravitate towards slightly out of tune pianos. It's more difficult for me to write a song on piano, I can't just sit at it and say OK 'Today I'm gonna write about this', I sit down at it and most times no inspiration hits. But once in a while some strange raggedy song pours out. I feel like with piano, it writes me. I don't dictate anything'.

Adding to the singer’s impressive stockpile of cover versions, Til The Goin' Gets Gone features a superlative rendition of folk/country standard Waiting ‘Round to Die by legendary US singer Townes Van Zandt.

Frequently described as a ‘songwriter’s songwriter’ due to the stellar list of artists who have covered his songs or cited him as an inspiration (Bob Dylan, Emmylou Harris, Laura Marling, Neil Young, Chelsea Wolfe), Lindi credits discovering his music with helping to overcome a case of writer’s block. ‘I was feeling really uninspired just before I learned of his music’ the singer recalls. ‘But sometimes when you discover someone's entire catalogue of brilliance you are just left awe-struck. I’ll never be a shadow of the songwriter Van Zandt is, but it raised a new bar for me and piqued my curiosity about the many different ways one can write a song and tell a story with that song. Van Zandt is one helluva storyteller’.

‘It was the first song of his that I heard; it wrenched my heart and stirred my soul’ Lindi says of deciding to record Waiting ‘Round To Die. ‘I know it's been covered a billion times, but that didn't matter to me. I felt I needed to pay my own tribute to that song’.

On the subject of new discoveries, have you picked up any other recent inspirations musical or otherwise? ‘I’ve been so busy lately I haven't had much down time to sit and listen to new music. But I'm always trawling playlists and podcasts for new discoveries. On our road trip to Ottawa from Toronto the other day we listened to BB Kings' blues station on satellite radio. It was amazing’. With a support stint with Southern Rock singer Chris Stapleton recently concluded Lindi is ‘Hoping to make a return to the UK next year’. A slew of North American tour dates (details below), is in the next order of business as the next chapter in the singer's storied career opens in considerable style.